Background/aims: Studies on post-hepatectomy prognoses by infecting viral species have only been rarely reported.

Methodology: The patients who had undergone hepatectomy for primary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) over the past 10 years at our hospital were divided into three groups based on their underlying causal diseases: hepatitis B (B type), hepatitis C (C type), and non-viral hepatitis including alcoholic hepatitis, and their backgrounds and long-term results after hepatectomy were comparatively investigated.

Results: As for tumor factors, the tumor diameter was 3.7+/-2.1 cm in C type patients, which was significantly smaller than the 5.2+/-3.3 cm diameter in B type patients (p=0.01) and 7.9+/-5.6 cm in non-viral patients (p=0.001). However, the frequencies of intrahepatic metastasis, portal vein infiltration, capsule formation and capsule infiltration did not differ significantly among the three groups. Although there was no significant difference observed among the three groups for the recurrence-free survival time, HCC had recurred at as early a stage as within 1 postoperative year in 50% of non-viral patients.

Conclusions: The size of a tumor upon hepatectomy and the presence or absence of intrahepatic metastasis were found to be significant factors contributing to the postoperative recurrence of HCC. It is possible that the recurrence-free postoperative survival time may be prolonged by earlier detection of HCC, particularly for the B type and the non-viral type in which the tumor size was already large at the time of surgery.

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